{"id":3827,"date":"1994-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1994-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-75-no-4-july-august-1994-flying-the-world\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:10:46","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:10:46","slug":"vol-75-no-4-july-august-1994-flying-the-world","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-75-no-4-july-august-1994-flying-the-world\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 75 No. 4 &#8211; July\/August 1994 &#8211; Flying the World"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">This year of anniversaries calls for an                     appreciation of man&#8217;s ability to fly, one of the greatest                     of human achievements. The miracle of modern aviation has                     not been wrought totally on the technical side. It also entails                     a triumph of international cooperation. That is what permits                     us to travel almost anywhere on earth today&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> It so happens that two of the great unsung events in the                     history of aviation occurred the same year in two cities of                     the same name: St. Petersburg, Florida, and St. Petersburg,                     Russia. On January 1, 1914, a pilot named Tony Jannus took                     off from the American St. Petersburg on a 23-minute flight                     to Tampa, which marked the beginning of scheduled air service                     as we know it today. Six months later in Russia, a 24-year-old                     engineering genius named Igor Sikorsky carried six passengers                     on a test flight lasting 6 1\/2 hours in a huge (for the time)                     four-engine aircraft. Later that year Sikorsky and three colleagues                     flew this prototype of the modern airliner from St. Petersburg                     to Kiev and back on a round trip of 2,000 kilometres.<\/p>\n<p>It is difficult for people living 80 years later in the                     final decade of the &#8220;Century of Flight&#8221; to appreciate just                     how revolutionary was Sikorsky&#8217;s idea of a large enclosed                     people-carrier. We have now become overly familiar with a                     phenomenon which in centuries past remained beyond man&#8217;s most                     distant aspirations, namely the ability to fly. The first                     aviators approached this technological triumph in a gingerly                     way, counting their speed and the horsepower of their engines                     in low double digits and their time aloft in minutes rather                     than hours. For some years after the Wright brothers&#8217; <em>Flyer                     One<\/em> biplane first lifted off the ground for 12 seconds                     in December, 1903, every flight was a venture which could                     end in injury or death.<\/p>\n<p>At that stage, however, nobody put much stock in the prospect                     of aircraft transporting people and goods from one place to                     another. The machines were necessarily of such light construction                     that they could only carry one passenger at a time. The first                     air passengers did not want to be taken anywhere in particular.                     Rather, they were on the original &#8220;joy ride,&#8221; defying danger                     for the fantastic sensation of breaking the bonds of gravity.<\/p>\n<p>The prevailing thinking about the future of aviation was                     that it had some military potential, and would provide fine                     sport, like horseback riding. In inaugurating a regular passenger                     service (four round trips a day; return fare $10) the proprietors                     of the Florida St. Petersburg&#8217;s Airboat Line were taking a                     daring step ahead of their time.<\/p>\n<p>Sikorsky was even more visionary in seeing aviation as a                     means of large-scale, long-distance transportation. Until                     the turn of the 20th century, the only speculation on the                     possibility of airborne commerce came from poets like Byron                     and Tennyson. Since they do not actually have to do what they                     write about, poets can write about doing anything they like.                     But Sikorsky was a hands-on workman with an intimate knowledge                     of the myriad and massive difficulties of what he was trying                     to accomplish &#8211; build the progenitor of a breed of airborne                     giants that would carry passengers and cargo across oceans                     from city to city with no intermediate stops.<\/p>\n<p>The outbreak of World War I soon after his epic 1914 flight                     cast a shadow over Sikorsky&#8217;s grand visions. Instead of going                     into commercial service, his magnificent flying machine made                     its debut as the world&#8217;s first heavy bomber. Seventy-three                     warplanes were built according to his basic design, graduating                     in range and power. They flew about 400 missions over a distance                     of 120,000 kilometres. Apparently all were destroyed in the                     chaos of Russia&#8217;s revolution and military collapse.<\/p>\n<p>Still, by demonstrating that a plane of that size could                     be flown regularly, Sikorsky deserves the title of the father                     of the modern transport aircraft. (In the 1940s he would also                     become the father of the modern helicopter.) Following Russia&#8217;s                     lead, the major combatant nations in World War I all developed                     long-range bombers. It was in a stripped-down British Vickers                     Vimy bomber that two Royal Air Force officers, John Alcock                     and A. W. Brown, became the first men to fly directly across                     the Atlantic Ocean on June 15, 1919.<\/p>\n<p>Even as they braved the North Atlantic winds, commercial                     aviation was off and running on a practical level. Airlines                     had been formed with planes and ground facilities left over                     from World War I, operating scheduled services among many                     points in continental Europe and Great Britain. Since the                     routes criss-crossed national boundaries, it soon became clear                     that aviation would bring about a fundamental change in the                     relationships among states.<\/p>\n<h3>From the beginning, a progressive and                   internationalist approach<\/h3>\n<p>When delegates from 33 nations took time out from the peace                     negotiations in Paris to discuss this question in 1919, they                     proceeded on the premise that the traditional legal terms                     of reference for international commerce could not be applied                     to the new industry. If they equated it with land transportation,                     then a flight passing over a country should be subject to                     all the laws of the land underneath it, which could prove                     vexatious and cumbersome for all parties. But if they followed                     the precedent of marine transportation and declared a kind                     of aerial freedom of the seas, then the nations being overflown                     would have no control over what was being done in their own                     airspace.<\/p>\n<p>The agreement which resulted from that meeting contained                     a solution which has served the international aviation community                     nicely ever since, to the effect that each state would maintain                     sovereignty over its own airspace without prejudice to the                     right of innocent passage by aircraft of other nations. The                     &#8220;Paris Convention&#8221; also took a broad internationalist approach                     to such matters as airworthiness certification, pilot licensing,                     and aircraft registration and identification. To implement                     the convention, the first intergovernmental aviation organization                     was launched &#8211; the International Committee for Air Navigation                     (ICAN).<\/p>\n<p>In the meantime, the airlines themselves had come to the                     conclusion that commercial aviation would require extraordinary                     international cooperation to meet its full potential. So,                     in August, 1919, representatives of the British, Danish, Dutch,                     German, Norwegian and Swedish carriers came together in the                     Hague to form the International Air Traffic Association (IATA),                     a non-political organization dedicated to coordinating operating                     and business practices on international air routes.<\/p>\n<p>It was clear from the beginning that, as a quasi-public                     service, commercial aviation would have more contact with                     governments than other industries. At the time IATA was founded,                     the finances of its members were heavily dependent on airmail,                     the industry&#8217;s original financial mainstay. It successfully                     lobbied to win for its members a regular share of the world&#8217;s                     mail.<\/p>\n<p>It was also clear that the organization representing commercial                     carriers would have to work closely with the organization                     representing governments. IATA and ICAN formed a common front                     to persuade governments to standardize the ground signals                     which informed pilots of wind direction, cloud ceilings, etc.                     When these were replaced by radio, the two organizations made                     sure that commercial air traffic was allotted its own fixed                     frequencies. Their joint efforts in developing navigation                     and landing aids enabled instrument flying at night and in                     murky weather. They also joined in successful efforts to talk                     governments into eliminating needless red tape.<\/p>\n<p>As traffic grew, the operators cooperated among themselves                     to establish many of the distinguishing characteristics which                     today make international aviation an industry like no other.                     IATA meetings resulted in a continuous exchange of technical,                     operational and statistical information which formed the basis                     for the coordination of schedules, documentation, and legal                     provisions.<\/p>\n<p>In the all-important setting of standards, an IATA committee                     decided that all dial instruments should turn clockwise, and                     that all throttles should be made so that pushing on them                     would increase speed and pulling on them would reduce it.                     Through IATA, the airlines developed arrangements whereby                     one airline could book passengers on others through a single                     set of tickets, the precursor of the impressive communications                     and financial system which now allows &#8220;one-stop shopping&#8221;                     for multiple-airline journeys. As far back as the 1920s, members                     were laying the groundwork for the modern travel industry,                     agreeing on uniform baggage allowances, travel agents&#8217; certification                     and commissions, round-trip discounts, and terms for inclusive                     tour packages.<\/p>\n<p>The 1930s ushered in a new era of international flight,                     dominated by tri-motor transports and flying boats. Using                     a combination of both types of equipment, Pan American Airways                     opened up routes from the United States to points throughout                     the Caribbean and Latin America as far south as Buenos Aires.                     Later it launched its famous China Clipper service to the                     Far East. Not to be outdone, Britain&#8217;s Imperial Airways used                     flying boats to fly from England to South Africa, India and                     Australia. Fuel limitations necessitated a number of overnight                     stops along the way. A person travelling from Britain in this                     fashion would take 8 1\/2 days to reach Singapore and 12 1\/2                     days to reach Australia. That may seem long until one recalls                     that it took six weeks to get to Australia by ship.<\/p>\n<p>Oddly enough, the last ocean to be flown by airlines on                     a regular basis was the narrowest and most-travelled one &#8211;                     the Atlantic. True, the German-built lighter-than-air craft,                     the <em>Graf Zeppelin<\/em>, had crossed between Europe and North                     America with 20 passengers in 1928 at a leisurely 100 kilometres                     an hour. But the airship experiment was short-lived: it ended                     with the last of several fatal disasters when the German <em>Hindenberg<\/em>                     burst into flames on landing in New Jersey with the loss of                     36 lives in May 1937. Two months later the first pathfinding                     commercial flights by the flying boats of Imperial and Pan                     American Airways opened up a transatlantic route using jump-off                     bases in Ireland and Newfoundland.<\/p>\n<p>The logistical imperatives of World War II made intercontinental                     flights commonplace, although they were generally in uncomfortable                     military aircraft stripped to the bare essentials. The exceptions                     were Igor Sikorsky&#8217;s new line of flying boats, which in the                     latter stages of the war carried 38 privileged passengers                     on flights as long as from New York to Rome. Sikorsky had                     emigrated to the United States and founded a flying boat company.                     In middle-age, he saw his youthful dream of non-stop transoceanic                     passenger service come true.<\/p>\n<p>From the very beginning, the development of commercial aviation                     had been notable for the remarkable foresight of everyone                     concerned, from designers to manufacturers to airlines to                     government regulators. There was perhaps no greater act of                     foresight than the convening of the International Civil Aviation                     Conference in Chicago in November, 1944, when World War II                     was still very much under way.<\/p>\n<p>This gathering of 52 nations recognized that there would                     be an irresistible surge of commercial aviation activity in                     the aftermath of the war, which would transform the world                     as people then knew it. In this &#8220;new world order,&#8221; international                     cooperation would be more crucial than ever. The Chicago Convention                     promulgated the &#8220;freedoms of the air&#8221; by which multilateral                     relationships in aviation have been ruled ever since.<\/p>\n<p>Out of the conference was born the International Civil Aviation                     Organization (ICAO), which is now celebrating its 50th anniversary.                     The Montreal-based United Nations agency is dedicated to maintaining                     orderly and safe commerce on the world&#8217;s airways, on which                     it regulates operating practices and traffic control. Governed                     by an assembly and council of nations, ICAO sets standards                     for the licensing and infrastructure of world aviation, provides                     technical assistance, keeps track of key statistics, and mediates                     international disputes.<\/p>\n<h3>The UN establishes a &#8216;new world order&#8217; on international air routes<\/h3>\n<p>As in pre-war days, there was a need for a parallel organization                     of commercial carriers to work with that of governments. Thus                     IATA, which had become a casualty of the war, was revived                     in 1945. The new organization, this time named the International                     Air <em> Transport<\/em> Association, also has its headquarters                     in Montreal, in close proximity to its governmental counterpart.                     It has since grown vastly to embrace 224 member airlines which                     fly to 133 nations. Today, ICAO and IATA work closely together                     on many matters of mutual concern.<\/p>\n<p>For more than a decade after the war, ships remained the                     dominant form of overseas passenger transportation. In 1952,                     the <em>SS United States<\/em> sailed from New York to Southampton                     in three days, 10 hours and 40 minutes, an incredible 10 hours                     faster than any vessel had ever before crossed the North Atlantic.                     Its achievement was clouded by the fact that a four-engine                     Constellation could make the run from New York direct to London                     or Paris in under 12 hours.<\/p>\n<p>In the summer of 1957 came the fateful day when more people                     crossed the Atlantic by airplane than by ocean liner. As John                     Maxtone- Graham put it in his book, <em>The Only Way to Cross<\/em>                     : &#8220;Over the postwar fleets that sailed the North Atlantic                     flew aircraft that would cripple the ships as no storm ever                     had.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The passenger flying boat also became obsolete, thanks to                     a wartime expansion in the number of airfields worldwide and                     enhancements in the range and size of ground-landing aircraft.                     The war also gave rise to radar and powerful new radio systems                     which permitted airplanes to navigate safely over vast distances.                     And just at the end of the hostilities had come the most far-reaching                     development of all, the jet engine, which was briefly used                     to power small German and British military planes.<\/p>\n<p>In 1952 British Overseas Airways Corporation, now British                     Airways, inaugurated the world&#8217;s first scheduled jet passenger                     service between London and Johannesburg. By the end of the                     decade the British deHavilland Comets had yielded pride of                     place to the much bigger American Boeing 707s and Douglas                     DC-8s.<\/p>\n<p>By carrying twice as many people twice as fast as propeller-driven                     passenger planes, the jets sparked their own particular aviation                     revolution. They shrunk the world by bringing distant points                     closer together in terms of travelling time. For instance,                     Montreal and London became six hours apart, compared with                     13 hours 10 years earlier. (The supersonic BAC\/A\u00e9rospatiale                     Concorde would later render London and New York less than                     three hours apart.)<\/p>\n<h3><span class=\"quote\">Mammoth machines more wonderful than                   Jules Verne&#8217;s dreams<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>Not only did the jets slash the time spent on the more familiar                     routes, they made it feasible to go to places that were once                     dauntingly distant. A person in Toronto, for instance, could                     contemplate without a shudder catching a plane for Tokyo.                     By bringing business people from different countries face-to-face,                     the jet delivered the kick-start to today&#8217;s global economy.                     Among other things, it transformed the arts and international                     politics. Now, city dwellers in any western country could                     enjoy live performances by the world&#8217;s top musicians and entertainers.                     &#8220;Shuttle diplomacy&#8221; brought a more personal touch to relations                     among world leaders, with historic results in settling differences                     among states.<\/p>\n<p>But the heaviest impact of the jet engine on human affairs                     came in 1970 with the introduction of the Boeing 747. That                     first jumbo jet carried 385 passengers; the basic design has                     since been taken through a succession of changes, so that                     the latest model has a capacity of over 575, plus crew. These                     mammoth machines surpass in wonder anything that could have                     come from the imagination of Jules Verne. They are like flying                     hotels, carrying all the facilities necessary to feed and                     otherwise care for multitudes of people while cruising far                     above the clouds at a speed of almost 1,000 kilometres an                     hour for up to 15 hours at a stretch.<\/p>\n<p>The combination of size and efficiency of these and similar                     giant- sized planes has generated economies of scale undreamt-of                     by airline people a few years ago. The effect has been to                     drive down the cost of air travel relative to average incomes                     and the cost of other services. An economy return ticket between                     Vancouver and Ottawa in 1959 cost $400. Adjusted for inflation,                     that same amount today would take you handily to Hong Kong                     and back.<\/p>\n<p>Whereas overseas travel was previously the preserve of a                     small economic elite, low air fares have dramatically opened                     up the world to ordinary people. Three generations ago, the                     hidden rose-red city of Petra had been viewed only by the                     most intrepid (and well-off) adventurers. Now a secretary                     from Winnipeg can see this ancient marvel on a stopoff in                     Jordan on her way to view the Taj Mahal.<\/p>\n<p>Jet aviation is directly responsible for creating what is                     now the world&#8217;s largest industry, international tourism. Hundreds                     of thousands of travel agencies have opened their doors to                     serve pleasure travellers, and resorts, hotels and other tourist                     facilities have sprung up almost literally from pole to pole.                     Though many would argue that this is not altogether a good                     thing for the host nations, there can be no doubt about its                     enormous economic impact. It is estimated that tourism is                     directly or indirectly responsible for one out of every nine                     jobs in the world.<\/p>\n<p>The potential despoliation of cultures and environments                     on the tourist circuit is only one feature of the inevitable                     dark side of progress in international aviation. If the jet                     plane has spawned a new class of world traveller, it has also                     spawned a new and particularly vicious class of terrorist.                     As well, the extreme competition which has made overseas air                     travel such a fabulous bargain has spread financial distress                     throughout the industry, causing many airlines (including                     the historic Pan American) to succumb to bankruptcy. Most                     others are surviving by the financial skin of their teeth.<\/p>\n<p>But the industry no doubt will overcome its present problems,                     just as it has overcome so many others in the 75 years since                     the forerunners of ICAO and IATA were founded. In those years                     it has been through social upheavals, depressions, recessions,                     and wars both hot and cold. Throughout it all, civil aviation                     has remained a model of pragmatic international cooperation                     in the interests of the convenience, comfort, and safety of                     its users everywhere. If all human affairs were conducted                     in the same spirit, mankind would have a lot less to worry                     about.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[81],"class_list":["post-3827","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-81"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 75 No. 4 - July\/August 1994 - Flying the World - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-75-no-4-july-august-1994-flying-the-world\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 75 No. 4 - July\/August 1994 - Flying the World - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"This year of anniversaries calls for an appreciation of man&#8217;s ability to fly, one of the greatest of human achievements. 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The miracle of modern aviation has not been wrought totally on the technical side. It also entails a triumph of international cooperation. 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